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Paperback

A Quiet Violence: View from a Bangladesh Village

$46.99
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A quiet violence today stalks the villages and shanty towns of the Third World, the violence of needless hunger. In this book, two Bengali-seaking Americans take the reader to a Bangladesh village where they lived for nine months.

There, the readers meets some of the world’s poorest people - peasants, sharecroppers and landless labourers - and some of the not-so-poor people who profit from their misery. The villager’s poverty is not fortuitous, a result of divine dispensation or individual failings of charachter. Rather, it is the outcome of a long history of exploitation, culminating in a social order which today benefits a few at the expense of many.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Institute for Food & Development Policy / Food First Books
Country
United States
Date
31 December 1983
Pages
284
ISBN
9780935028164

A quiet violence today stalks the villages and shanty towns of the Third World, the violence of needless hunger. In this book, two Bengali-seaking Americans take the reader to a Bangladesh village where they lived for nine months.

There, the readers meets some of the world’s poorest people - peasants, sharecroppers and landless labourers - and some of the not-so-poor people who profit from their misery. The villager’s poverty is not fortuitous, a result of divine dispensation or individual failings of charachter. Rather, it is the outcome of a long history of exploitation, culminating in a social order which today benefits a few at the expense of many.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Institute for Food & Development Policy / Food First Books
Country
United States
Date
31 December 1983
Pages
284
ISBN
9780935028164